Treacherous in a sentence as an adjective

On their other hand they're treacherous because they encourage us to think in these kinds of terms.

"Any feeling you give will be used against you in their treacherous games - you won't get true feeling back.

They navigate treacherous terrain and need no looking after on their way.

That would give an idea of which states/regions/roads are more treacherous or have more dangerous drivers.

Now we'll have to just spend more taxes for new secret programs to replace the ones revealed by treacherous commie spies!

You don't know what the tech is or what the real numbers are or what the purpose of the acquisition was. I think it's very easy to jump to a conclusion on an emotional basis, and our belief in our objectivity is what makes this all the more treacherous.

But flat land above the tide line implies a correspondingly gentle ***** below the water, meaning that the cable will pass for a greater distance through the treacherous shallows.

Here's a quote:"Some versions of treacherous computing would require the operating system to be specifically authorized by a particular company.

It's the same argument about treacherous computing that goes around, except the article seems to be suggesting people think it's a extent problem now because the TPM is always on, not a hypothetical in the future/ Microsoft's long term plan.

No, "I'm sorry you were offended" ********, no "freedom of speech" foolishness, no blaming the media for things he actually did. Instead, we get a clear recounting of events, a reasonable explanation for how it happened, a full apology, a reasonable defense against the false accusations, and closing with "it's my job to know".He's right; the Internet is a treacherous medium.

Treacherous definitions

adjective

dangerously unstable and unpredictable; "treacherous winding roads"; "an unreliable trestle"

See also: unreliable

adjective

tending to betray; especially having a treacherous character as attributed to the Carthaginians by the Romans; "Punic faith"; "the perfidious Judas"; "the fiercest and most treacherous of foes"; "treacherous intrigues"

See also: punic perfidious